Violin Solo
Violin + ...
For beginners
Composers

42 études ou caprices

Composer: Kreutzer Rodolphe

Instruments: Violin

Tags: Caprice Étude

#Arrangements

Download free scores:

40 Etudes - Complete Score PDF 4 MB40 Etudes - Complete Score PDF 4 MB
42 Etudes - Complete Score PDF 4 MB
42 Etudes - Complete Score PDF 8 MB
40 Etudes - Complete Score PDF 4 MBColor Cover PDF 1 MB
40 Etudes - Complete Score PDF 5 MB
40 Etudes - Complete Score PDF 6 MB
40 Etudes - Complete Score PDF 14 MB
40 Etudes - Complete Score PDF 13 MB
40 Etudes - Complete Score PDF 43 MB
40 Etudes - Score (missing pp.1-8) PDF 23 MB

Arrangements:

Violin + ...

Complete (40 or 42 Ètudes). Piano + Violin (Alexandre Cornélis)Complete (40 or 42 Ètudes). Violin(2) (Grünwald, Adolf)Complete (40 or 42 Ètudes). Piano + Violin (Carl Theodor Eichheim)Etude No.33. Piano + Violin (Mikhail Erdenko)

Other

Complete (40 or 42 Ètudes). Viola (Heinrich Ernst Kayser)Complete (40 or 42 Ètudes). Viola (Angelo Consolini)Selections. Viola (Hermann Ritter)Etude No.2. Orchestra (Hanke, Adrian)Etude No.4. Orchestra (Hanke, Adrian)Selections. Bassoon (Jean Espaignet)Etude No.1. Orchestra (Hanke, Adrian)Etude No.9. String instrument (Hanke, Adrian)Etude No.8. String instrument (Hanke, Adrian)
Wikipedia
The 42 études ou caprices ("42 études or capriccios") for solo violin were composed by Rodolphe Kreutzer around 1796. While Kreutzer was a prolific composer with some 50 stage works and dozens of other pieces to his credit, he is best known as a pedagogue. Together with Pierre Baillot and Pierre Rode, he was at the center of the development of the French school of violin playing around the turn of the 19th century, which defined much of the 19th-century (and hence the modern) approach to playing the violin.
The 42 études have remained a core part of the teaching repertoire since their publication, and are today perhaps the most common set of studies for intermediate and advanced students of the violin. They were written to demonstrate the possibilities of the Tourte bow, which was then innovative but has since been universally adopted, meaning Kreutzer's studies are highly applicable to the development of modern bowing technique. Another of Kreutzer's important didactic goals was developing fluency in contraction and extension of the left hand, which is also crucial to modern students of the violin.
The earliest extant edition of the collection, from 1807, comprises 40 pieces. Kreutzer's authorship is broadly accepted for two other études, nos. 13 and 25, that were included in some early editions. The etudes broadly form a logical pedagogic progression, though the relatively difficult Etude No. 1 appears out of place, perhaps placed at the beginning for publication to make the studies look more challenging at first glance. It is generally considered that the correct place to start is with Etude No. 2, which is the simplest study, and some editions re-order the pieces to correct this.
The collection's contents is as follows: